Elliptical Trainer Recommendations?

My dh and I are buying a new house and want to set up a workout room for ourselves. He wants to buy an elliptical because he's got bad knees and has heard ellipticals are easy on the knees. Can you all recommend a good one to get? We have no idea where to begin to look.

Thanks for your help.:)
 
We just bought a new elliptical trainer by Nautilus. It is the NE 3000 model and we paid about $2,600 for it. All I can say is if you are going to use it a lot, buy a good one. If you buy one for less, it will last less. I would also try Consumer Reports. They have good information on them too.


Madonna
 
I agree with Madonna -- treat yourself to a really good, club-quality machine, and you're more likely to love it and use it. The other thing I think is critical is that you and your DH go and actually USE each one you're thinking of buying for several minutes. Don't be self-conscious about it, just hop on it and go. A reputable store will encourage you to do this. I have knees like your DH, and my DH and I found that each manufacturer's flywheel action was a little different and some very good, very expensive machines stressed my crappy knees a lot. For example, my knees ached for hours after I tried out the much-recommended LifeFitness machine. This is really individual to each person's body so it's important that both of you test-drive.

We have a Precor EFX something-something -- can't remember the model number. It's the home version of their usual club model. It was our anniversary gift to each other two years ago, and it's been well-used, well-loved and works like clockwork. Truly one of the best purchases we've ever made. Our model was about $1800 whereas the club version was about $2400. Ours is programmable, has memory for two users' age/weight/workout stats and has a whole variety of useful pre-programs such as intensity intervals, steady target heart rate, cross-train (which I'll explain below), weight loss (this one essentially keeps your heart rate steady on the lower end of your "zone"), and hills. It also has adjustable incline and resistance (both electronic, of course) and has a Polar strap and heart rate monitor built in.

We did NOT buy the model that had the "ski poles" that you'd use to simultaneously work upper body, although Precor made a home version that had that feature. I really didn't want that -- I do upper body strength work separately and I wanted to be able to hop on and stride with my arms either resting lightly on the handlebars or swinging at my sides as if I were walking. For me (and my DH), this was strictly a lower body, cardio purchase. But keep in mind that the ski-pole version is out there if you prefer a more "Nordic Track" kind of motion.

We tried out ellipticals by five or six of the major manufacturers, all in roughly the same price range, and we chose Precor for two reasons. First, the Precor was extremely comfortable on my knees and had an incredibly smooth, gliding motion even at pretty heavy resistance. Second, Precor has (or had, at least at that time) a unique patented flywheel action with a fully reversible stride (striding backwards.) This works the entire backs of your legs and glutes like nothing else, taking the focus off your quads. One of my favorite pre-programmed workouts on our machine is the "cross train" program I mentioned. You set the total number of minutes you wish to stride, and it adds a five-minute warmup, a five-minute cooldown and splits your requested number of minutes into alternate backwards and forwards striding intervals. My legs and fanny are thoroughly and pleasantly toasted if I set the resistance and incline at a moderate level and chug along for 45 minutes. I especially like feeling the use in my hamstrings, glutes and calves, which sometimes feel like they don't work as hard when I'm just striding forward. Great endurance stuff and great cardio, too.

Enjoy your looking-around process and let us know what you buy! You'll like having one of these puppies at home! :)


http://www.click-smilies.de/sammlung0903/sport/sport-smiley-003.gif Kathy S. http://www.click-smilies.de/sammlung0903/spezial/spudniks/spudniklifter.gif
 
I bought a Nordic Track elliptical about a year ago and love it. It was on sale for $600. You can adjust the incline, which I love! We tried several and this was the one that felt like the $3000 machines. Sears did sell these, I think they still do. AS the others have said, you HAVE to go try them out, it's amazing how different they all are!

Happy shopping!
 
I bought the cheapest elliptical Proform makes and it wobbles. It gets the job done but I wish I'd spent just $100 more and got the next model up. You do get what you pay for.
 
You have room for an elliptical machine in your home?? That does it. I'm moving out of New York!!x( How's the housing market in Atlanta, Kathy? I'm on my way...
 
Nancy, come on down! :)

Hi Nancy! The housing market here is great, kiddo -- come on down! The dogwoods and daffodils are blooming and it was 80 degrees and sunny yesterday. If you don't mind being coated in yellow pollen :) this is YOUR town!!!

Our house has an odd but fortunate configuration, for us anyway. Atlanta is a hilly city (that surprises a lot of people!), and most Atlanta houses have big basements. But ours has none because of the slope of our property. We're built on slab. So to compensate a little for property value, the house was built with a partially finished attic and a nice staircase (completely finished) to the attic. What's weird is that the staircase is IN our guest room, meaning that when we've got company I can't work out til they're up and out. But anyhow, we've turned that attic space into our exercise room. It's gabled and not very wide, but is about 13 feet long. We mirrored one endcap wall and have our elliptical trainer, treadmill and recumbent bike lined up at one end of the room away from the mirror. At the mirrored end we have a TV stand with our little rotgut but never-fail single-DVD player underneath, and I have all my DVD's lined up on a makeshift bookcase (concrete blocks and planks :)) on one wall and my dumbbells and barbells lined up on the floor underneath. When I keep the weights tidy I've got enough space in front of the mirror to do Cathe's step work all the way around the step. I do have to modify the big traveling moves that take up so much space (like double grapevines, and of course a lot of Cardio Kicks' traveling scoops!)

http://www.click-smilies.de/sammlung0903/sport/sport-smiley-003.gif Kathy S. http://www.click-smilies.de/sammlung0903/spezial/spudniks/spudniklifter.gif
 
RE: Nancy, come on down! :)

Sounds heavenly! Apparently, our co-op continues to appreciate in value because of short supply. I can't help but daydream about selling at a huge profit and living off the proceeds from the sale in some nice part of the country somewhere. Since my DH works from home, (all techies do these days; wish I were a techie) he can live anywhere and still work for his company. And as for me, I just need to be near some relatively wealthy people who have estates that they want planned. Wouldn't it be lovely?? A room full of exercise equipment just for me!! I think I would have mirrors everywhere so I could finally get to see how bad my form is.....

Dreamin' in Brooklyn,
Nancy
 

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